Now that the stage where arresting politicians for doing their job has been reached, with ID cards on their way and the right to peaceful protest already curtailed, I thought it best that I ask a question of Parliament before such insolence sees me marched off for re-education.
I have watched, with increasing exacerbation, while politicians, our ‘elected representatives’ squander national resources and the public’s trust in equal measure. I am not a particularly well educated man, I am, perhaps, not the best suited to speak out, but I have to know why our Government, local and national, has ceased to represent the people in deed and word. Indeed, I find myself so used to the mouthing of empty platitudes by Government officials and elected members that often, to my shame; I do not even stop to question the venality of their words. It is as though, through sheer weight of repetition, they have come to carry a great soporific effect and engender a grim acceptance that there is nothing of worth behind the words.
I concede that, perhaps, many members are decent people with rational concerns, yet all I hear is empty speech, all I read are empty words and all I see are people who, against all reason, appear to have forgotten who they’re supposed to serve.
This letter, I suppose, is an empty gesture, a last hurrah of hope before the inevitable emigration to a saner nation, but at the same time it carries behind it a whole lifetime of hopes and expectations that have, in essence, been betrayed by people with whom I have nothing in common and little hope of reaching in any tangible sense.
The Britain in which I now live has little or no resemblance to the nation I grew up in, the unblinking eye of CCTV watches over us all like the Big Brother of Orwell’s nightmares, yet does little to assure our safety in the face of an ineffective police force, overflowing prisons, and a Crown Prosecution Service that would sooner release a habitual offender than spend money convicting and imprisoning them.
There are people who, quite inexplicably, have never worked a day in their life, yet are given money, housing and afforded innumerable benefits while others, toiling away in thankless jobs, have to scrape the very bottom of the barrel in order to make ends meet. Somehow, as a nation, we have spawned a generation that seems to believe handouts are theirs by right rather than a last resort in hard times. Yet still we coddle them, why?
Nationally, we are spoon-fed statistics and reports that endlessly extol the virtues of our failing government, that assure us our best interests are at the heart of all you do, that things aren’t as bad as they seem, yet money is squandered, powers are abused and, alarmingly, the buck is passed. It didn’t take long before RIPA was used to spy on people putting their bins out – the right to peaceful protest having already been curtailed – rather than pursue the perceived terrorist threat. What alarms most, beyond the pervasive surveillance, is that no one appears to have taken any meaningful steps to prevent the proliferation of such abuse because “it’s for our safety.”
We are asked to trust, yet it only appears to work one way, for most honourable members would, it seems, rather their expenses were kept secret, despite it being money from the collective coffers. Would a transparent parliament really be such a terrible thing, are we to do as you say, rather than as you do, is blind obedience the ultimate goal? You may roll your eyes, but it no longer seems as ridiculous and unlikely as it once did. Press photographers are already targeted by the MET’s Forward Intelligence Team for doing their jobs, reporters and activists apparently monitored ‘for our safety’, and yet it seems to me a crude hypocrisy that while we are to accept endless intrusion into our lives for our own supposed benefit, suggestions have been put forward to restrict access to MP’s home addresses, curtail the right of anyone to take photographs of, or identify, members of the police and armed forces, and, you know, generally do as we’re told.
Are we to blithely accept the inevitability of governmental databases replete with personal details, DNA samples, mobile phone and internet logs, yet raise no query as to why we can’t expect the same of our own representatives? To not want to know why, against prevailing public opinion, we’re being shifted towards a society with surveillance every bit as insidious as that of communist China?
But of course, I’m only one man, and this letter will no doubt receive the usual bland assurances without being thought on, considered, or addressed in any way. I’m no longer as upset about that as I should be; I’ve grown accustomed to my role as a resource to be mined, monitored and manipulated for the sake of convenience by those who know better, irrespective of what’s rational or right.
There are so many question that I want to ask, so many answers that I would love to have, such as why anyone in Parliament is even considering a Stasi-esque Civilian Security Force, but the sad truth is that I know no one is listening, that some lackey will read this letter, reply, and that that will be the end of it. The sheer frustration of knowing how futile the act of writing this is is indescribable, not that that’ll make any difference to you.
There was a time when I believed in the ability of our parliamentary democracy to represent the people, when I believed that our leaders were in some way accountable for their actions, noble or otherwise, but no longer, not since our nation became a laughing stock. There was once a trust between the people and their parliament, however misplaced, and now it is now gone, more or less, and I would like to know why none of you seem care.
That, I suppose, is my question.
Regards,
nunoncastors
They work for you, you know


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